shooter53
Well-Known Member
What damage would a 22.250 do with a 50grn head no powder just the primer, A friend seems to think it would kill a person, I dont think it would push out of the barrel
I did the exact same thing. Only difference was not seeing a new hole on the target which led me to pull the bolt just to be sure. Yup, bullet stuck in the barrel. I also altered my loading habits to prevent future"missed load". Good habits are just as hard to break as bad habits.Bullet WILL be lodged somewhere in the barrel. Probably 20 years ago I was shooting my 22-250 and my last shot didn't really recoil and obviously sounded different. Inspected the cartridge and didn't notice any soot around the case mouth. So I pulled the bolt and looked down the barrel. The bullet must have only made it in a few inches. Popped it out with a cleaning rod.
I realized I had missed putting powder in this case and have since changed my procedure.
You were wise to learn from past experience. We all make mistakes and hopefully we'll learn from those hard earned lessons.I had to implement quality control measures in my reloading process, not because I was smart, but because of ammo mishaps. Unfortunately, all happened during matches causing me to lose points but thankfully no injury or damage resulted.
Now, because of all these dummy-head moves, I...
A) use a flashlight and inspect each row on the reloading trade for powder present and approximate powder height.
B) After seating primers, I inspect the base for a primary as I'm putting it into the reloading block.
C) Also, after bullets are seated and loaded cartridges are placed base down into the 50 round box, I put an open second box on top of it, invert the boxes, and do a final inspection of head stamp and primer.
Issues I've had in the past were...
- forgetting to charge an entire row on the reloading block of 6 Dasher (bullets never left the case),
- an inverted primer (blew out my 6.5 Creedmoor Tikka extractor), and,
- mistakenly picking up a piece of Peterson Dasher brass when recovering my Lapua brass after a stage's course of fire (which, when reloaded and then fired created an overpressure and left brass stuck in the chamber).